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"I've
dislocated my shoulder, fractured my wrist," Robby said.
But these
injuries aren't his main health concern. You see, Robby suffers
from severe seizures.
This
is where Robby had his first big seizure. He was 4 years old and
swimming with his brothers and sisters in the family swimming pool.
When he went to the bottom his mom just thought he was being a goofy
kid. When he didn't come up for air after 45 seconds she knew something
was wrong.
"We jumped in
immediately and pulled him out and that seizure lasted almost three
hours," Robby’s mom Alicia Kaminski said.
Do you worry
about them riding bikes? Alicia said, “I do, but no more than any other
motocross mom."
"I wear a chest
protector, gloves, helmets," Robby said.
He also wears a
wrist watch looking device. It is a magnet that activates a Vagus Nerve
Stimulator or VNS.
It's a pacemaker like device implanted on the left side of Robby's
chest.
"It
stimulates left vagus nerve,” child neurologist Dr. Jasna Kojic said.
“Vagus nerve then stimulates nuclei in the brain that hopefully
prevents further hyperactivity of the brain wave that can trigger
seizures."
Swiping his
magnet usually stops a seizure immediately, but it doesn't stop all of
them.
"When I raised
my concerns about his dirt bike racing they stated I could fix a wire,
but not a broken heart," Dr. Kojic said.
As Robby follows
his dreams of becoming a professional dirt bike racer, his mom watches
knowing a seizure can happen anytime.
VNS therapy is
only for people who have not been able to control their seizures with
medications.
Robby Duke's
situation is atypical. Dr. Kojic says she does not advise people with
epilepsy to take part in contact sports.
That's
a look at Your Health,
Nancy Gay, Central Florida News 13.
April 25, 2006
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